弗罗里达丛鸦:一种消失的鸟的野外记录

IF 1 4区 环境科学与生态学 Q4 ECOLOGY
D. J. Robertson
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Florida scrub-jays are closely related to the widespread Woodhouse’s scrub-jay (A. woodhouseii), a species that occupies dry, brushy chaparral in the Southwest from Texas and Mexico northward to Oregon. About two million years ago, sea levels fell during the onset of the Pleistocene glacial advance and exposed sandy ridges along the northern Gulf Coast. These dry ridges allowed some western species including scrub-jays to migrate eastward and colonize what is now the Florida peninsula. When continental glacial ice melted, sea levels rose and isolated the scrub-jays and the other western species in Florida. Over thousands of years, these organisms evolved into new species adapted to the conditions on Florida’s high dunes and sand ridges. More recently, separate populations of scrub-jays became concentrated in four regions of the Florida peninsula. Because Florida’s well-drained uplands are the most valuable landscapes for cattle ranches, citrus groves, and housing, they have been targeted for development. Scrub-jays require exactly the same landscapes and, as a result, have suffered dramatic declines as scrub habitat has shrunk dramatically. Walters spent three years crisscrossing peninsular Florida, visiting each of the birds’ population centers. Walters is a veterinarian and a journalist but not a scrub-jay scientist, so local experts escorted him on driving and walking tours through the habitats. Detailed accounts of these guided explorations, presented as short chapters, constitute the majority of the book. Furthermore, because the challenges facing the birds’ survival differ somewhat depending on the region, Walters organized his book in four sections that allows him to focus on regional threats and conservation opportunities. The first section concentrates on mainland Brevard County and adjacent barrier islands along the central Atlantic coast. Walters’s grandfather lived in the county a century ago, where he was surrounded by scrub-jays as he drove the sandy coastal roads and fished on the barrier islands. Today, development has overwhelmed Brevard and scrub-jays persist on the mainland only in tiny, scattered preserves that are too small, too isolated, and too disturbed to sustain viable populations. In contrast, on South Merritt Island, the Kennedy Space Center and Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge retain large portions of the original coastal dune scrub. As a result, scrub-jays thrive in these refugia. Despite their large numbers, though, the birds are threatened by inbreeding and declining genetic diversity because scrub-jays do not disperse readily over long distances—especially across inimical habitat—so there are few if any additions to the Merritt Island population. In addition, this isolated population faces loss of habitat from sea level rise and could be eliminated altogether if the island were to receive a direct hit from a destructive hurricane. Even more subtle changes threaten the birds. Scrub is an early successional habitat that historically was maintained through periodic fires. Because of the proximity of the Kennedy Space Center, prescribed burning is circumscribed and often prohibited outright, so land managers are constrained in their ability to maintain the habitat the birds require. On the Gulf Coast in Manatee and Sarasota counties, the birds’ plight is similar. Coastal areas used to support large populations, but housing and golf course development eliminated nearly all scrub near the Gulf beaches, and continuing infill development and encroachments likely have doomed the few scrub-jay family groups that remain in degraded natural areas. Inland from the hyper-developed coast, though, Manatee County has proactively expanded two open space preserves in cooperation with one of Florida’s phosphate ore surface mining companies. Through prescribed burning and mechanical vegetation removal, county land managers are gradually restoring scrub habitat in these extensive preserves. In addition, the phosphate mining company is paying to capture scrub-jays","PeriodicalId":49780,"journal":{"name":"Natural Areas Journal","volume":"42 1","pages":"169 - 170"},"PeriodicalIF":1.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-04-20","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Florida Scrub-Jay: Field Notes on a Vanishing Bird\",\"authors\":\"D. J. 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Florida scrub-jays are closely related to the widespread Woodhouse’s scrub-jay (A. woodhouseii), a species that occupies dry, brushy chaparral in the Southwest from Texas and Mexico northward to Oregon. About two million years ago, sea levels fell during the onset of the Pleistocene glacial advance and exposed sandy ridges along the northern Gulf Coast. These dry ridges allowed some western species including scrub-jays to migrate eastward and colonize what is now the Florida peninsula. When continental glacial ice melted, sea levels rose and isolated the scrub-jays and the other western species in Florida. Over thousands of years, these organisms evolved into new species adapted to the conditions on Florida’s high dunes and sand ridges. More recently, separate populations of scrub-jays became concentrated in four regions of the Florida peninsula. 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The first section concentrates on mainland Brevard County and adjacent barrier islands along the central Atlantic coast. Walters’s grandfather lived in the county a century ago, where he was surrounded by scrub-jays as he drove the sandy coastal roads and fished on the barrier islands. Today, development has overwhelmed Brevard and scrub-jays persist on the mainland only in tiny, scattered preserves that are too small, too isolated, and too disturbed to sustain viable populations. In contrast, on South Merritt Island, the Kennedy Space Center and Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge retain large portions of the original coastal dune scrub. As a result, scrub-jays thrive in these refugia. Despite their large numbers, though, the birds are threatened by inbreeding and declining genetic diversity because scrub-jays do not disperse readily over long distances—especially across inimical habitat—so there are few if any additions to the Merritt Island population. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

并不是每个自然区域的专业人士在做出土地管理决策时都必须考虑到佛罗里达州丛林松鸦(Aphelocoma coerrulescens)等地方性、联邦列出的濒危物种。但几乎所有自然区域的专业人员都面临着管理挑战,如应对边缘效应、外来入侵物种、栖息地破碎化、演替变化以及对非目标物种可能产生不利影响的管理策略。马克·沃尔特斯(Mark Walters)对佛罗里达州丛林松鸦数量迅速减少的描述,是一个令人信服的案例研究,探讨了自然区专业人士面临的许多土地管理和保护问题,这些问题都是由一个对栖息地要求非常严格的魅力物种所构成的。佛罗里达州的灌丛松鸦与广泛分布的伍德豪斯灌丛松鸦(A.woodhouseii)有密切的亲缘关系,该物种分布在西南部从德克萨斯州和墨西哥向北到俄勒冈州的干燥、灌木丛生的灌木丛中。大约200万年前,更新世冰川运动开始时,海平面下降,墨西哥湾北部海岸露出沙脊。这些干燥的山脊使包括灌丛松鸦在内的一些西方物种得以向东迁徙,并在现在的佛罗里达半岛上定居。当大陆冰川融化时,海平面上升,将佛罗里达州的灌木松鸦和其他西部物种隔离开来。数千年来,这些生物进化成了适应佛罗里达州高沙丘和沙脊条件的新物种。最近,灌木丛松鸦的不同种群集中在佛罗里达半岛的四个地区。因为佛罗里达州排水良好的高地是牧场、柑橘林和住房最有价值的景观,所以它们一直是开发的目标。灌木林松鸦需要完全相同的景观,因此,随着灌木林栖息地的急剧缩小,它们的数量急剧减少。沃尔特斯花了三年时间在佛罗里达半岛上穿梭,参观了每一个鸟类种群中心。沃尔特斯是一名兽医和记者,但不是一名丛林松鸦科学家,因此当地专家护送他开车和步行穿越栖息地。对这些指导性探索的详细描述,以简短的章节呈现,构成了本书的大部分内容。此外,由于鸟类生存面临的挑战因地区而异,沃尔特斯将他的书分为四个部分,使他能够专注于地区威胁和保护机会。第一部分集中在布雷瓦德县大陆和大西洋中部海岸附近的屏障岛。沃尔特斯的祖父一个世纪前住在该县,在那里,他开车穿过沙质海岸公路,在屏障岛上钓鱼时,周围都是灌木丛中的松鸦。如今,发展已经淹没了布雷瓦德,灌木丛松鸦只在大陆上的微小、分散的保护区中存在,这些保护区太小、太孤立、太混乱,无法维持生存的种群。相比之下,在南梅里特岛,肯尼迪航天中心和梅里特岛国家野生动物保护区保留了大部分原始海岸沙丘。因此,丛林松鸦在这些避难所里茁壮成长。尽管数量庞大,但这些鸟仍受到近亲繁殖和遗传多样性下降的威胁,因为灌木松鸦不容易长距离分散,尤其是在敌对的栖息地,因此梅里特岛的种群几乎没有增加。此外,由于海平面上升,这些与世隔绝的种群面临着栖息地的丧失,如果该岛受到破坏性飓风的直接袭击,这些种群可能会被完全消灭。甚至更微妙的变化也威胁着鸟类。灌木林是一个早期的演替栖息地,在历史上是通过周期性的火灾来维持的。由于距离肯尼迪航天中心很近,规定的焚烧是有限制的,通常是完全禁止的,因此土地管理者在维护鸟类所需栖息地的能力方面受到限制。在墨西哥湾沿岸的马纳蒂县和萨拉索塔县,这些鸟的处境相似。沿海地区曾经支持大量人口,但住房和高尔夫球场的开发几乎消除了海湾海滩附近的所有灌木丛,持续的填充开发和侵占可能注定了少数仍在退化自然地区的灌木丛松鸦家族的命运。然而,马纳蒂县与佛罗里达州的一家磷矿露天开采公司合作,积极扩大了两个开放空间保护区,远离高度发达的海岸。通过规定的焚烧和机械清除植被,县土地管理者正在逐步恢复这些广泛保护区的灌木栖息地。此外,这家磷矿开采公司正在花钱捕捉灌木丛中的松鸦
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Florida Scrub-Jay: Field Notes on a Vanishing Bird
Not every natural area professional must consider an endemic, federally listed endangered species like the Florida scrub-jay (Aphelocoma coerulescens) when making land management decisions. But nearly all natural area professionals are confronted with stewardship challenges such as dealing with edge effects, invasive nonnative species, habitat fragmentation, successional changes, and management strategies with potentially adverse impacts on nontarget species. Mark Walters’s account of the rapidly declining Florida scrub-jay is a compelling case study of many of the land management and conservation issues confronting natural area professionals framed by a charismatic species with very strict habitat requirements. Florida scrub-jays are closely related to the widespread Woodhouse’s scrub-jay (A. woodhouseii), a species that occupies dry, brushy chaparral in the Southwest from Texas and Mexico northward to Oregon. About two million years ago, sea levels fell during the onset of the Pleistocene glacial advance and exposed sandy ridges along the northern Gulf Coast. These dry ridges allowed some western species including scrub-jays to migrate eastward and colonize what is now the Florida peninsula. When continental glacial ice melted, sea levels rose and isolated the scrub-jays and the other western species in Florida. Over thousands of years, these organisms evolved into new species adapted to the conditions on Florida’s high dunes and sand ridges. More recently, separate populations of scrub-jays became concentrated in four regions of the Florida peninsula. Because Florida’s well-drained uplands are the most valuable landscapes for cattle ranches, citrus groves, and housing, they have been targeted for development. Scrub-jays require exactly the same landscapes and, as a result, have suffered dramatic declines as scrub habitat has shrunk dramatically. Walters spent three years crisscrossing peninsular Florida, visiting each of the birds’ population centers. Walters is a veterinarian and a journalist but not a scrub-jay scientist, so local experts escorted him on driving and walking tours through the habitats. Detailed accounts of these guided explorations, presented as short chapters, constitute the majority of the book. Furthermore, because the challenges facing the birds’ survival differ somewhat depending on the region, Walters organized his book in four sections that allows him to focus on regional threats and conservation opportunities. The first section concentrates on mainland Brevard County and adjacent barrier islands along the central Atlantic coast. Walters’s grandfather lived in the county a century ago, where he was surrounded by scrub-jays as he drove the sandy coastal roads and fished on the barrier islands. Today, development has overwhelmed Brevard and scrub-jays persist on the mainland only in tiny, scattered preserves that are too small, too isolated, and too disturbed to sustain viable populations. In contrast, on South Merritt Island, the Kennedy Space Center and Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge retain large portions of the original coastal dune scrub. As a result, scrub-jays thrive in these refugia. Despite their large numbers, though, the birds are threatened by inbreeding and declining genetic diversity because scrub-jays do not disperse readily over long distances—especially across inimical habitat—so there are few if any additions to the Merritt Island population. In addition, this isolated population faces loss of habitat from sea level rise and could be eliminated altogether if the island were to receive a direct hit from a destructive hurricane. Even more subtle changes threaten the birds. Scrub is an early successional habitat that historically was maintained through periodic fires. Because of the proximity of the Kennedy Space Center, prescribed burning is circumscribed and often prohibited outright, so land managers are constrained in their ability to maintain the habitat the birds require. On the Gulf Coast in Manatee and Sarasota counties, the birds’ plight is similar. Coastal areas used to support large populations, but housing and golf course development eliminated nearly all scrub near the Gulf beaches, and continuing infill development and encroachments likely have doomed the few scrub-jay family groups that remain in degraded natural areas. Inland from the hyper-developed coast, though, Manatee County has proactively expanded two open space preserves in cooperation with one of Florida’s phosphate ore surface mining companies. Through prescribed burning and mechanical vegetation removal, county land managers are gradually restoring scrub habitat in these extensive preserves. In addition, the phosphate mining company is paying to capture scrub-jays
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来源期刊
Natural Areas Journal
Natural Areas Journal 环境科学-林学
CiteScore
1.70
自引率
11.10%
发文量
50
审稿时长
>36 weeks
期刊介绍: The Natural Areas Journal is the flagship publication of the Natural Areas Association is the leading voice in natural areas management and preservation. The Journal features peer-reviewed original research articles on topics such as: -Applied conservation biology- Ecological restoration- Natural areas management- Ecological assessment and monitoring- Invasive and exotic species management- Habitat protection- Fire ecology. It also includes writing on conservation issues, forums, topic reviews, editorials, state and federal natural area activities and book reviews. In addition, we publish special issues on various topics.
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